Description |
xv, 171 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm |
Series |
The Bedford series in history and culture |
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Bedford series in history and culture.
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Contents |
Contents note continued: 35.Reflections on the American Exhibition, August 23, 1959 / Marietta Shaginian -- 36.Is There a Science of the Home?, October 1964 / A. Sikachev -- 4.Down on the Farm -- Abundance and Rivalry -- 37.Farmer Khrushchev, August 10, 1959 / Edmund K. Faltermayer -- 38.Speech in Des Moines, Iowa, September 22, 1959 / Nikita Khrushchev -- The Problems of Plenty -- 39.Speech on the Farm Problem and the Policy Choices, February 1958 / John Kenneth Galbraith -- 40.The Farmer in the Space Age, October 7, 1959 / Erwin D. Canham -- Agricultural Diplomacy -- 41.Memo to the President re Tour of the Soviet Union, July 30, 1963 / Orville Freeman -- 42.U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, The Significance of Four Million Tons of U.S. Wheat for Food Consumption in the USSR, October 15, 1963 -- 43.U.S. Information Agency, Khrushchev in Wheat Field, August 1964 -- Appendixes -- A Chronology of the Kitchen Debate and Cold War Consumer Politics (1941--1964) -- |
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Contents note continued: Questions for Consideration -- Selected Bibliography |
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Contents note continued: Socialist Consumer Citizens -- 22.Report on Purchasing Power of Soviet Workers, 1953 / Edmund Nash -- 23.Speech on the 1959 Soviet Seven-Year Economic Plan, January 1959 / Nikita Khrushchev -- 24.Speech on Communist Youth and Consumerism, January 1959 / V. Ye. Semichastny -- 25.A Soviet Woman Questions Consumerism, 1962 -- 3.An Easier Life for Our Housewives -- A Servantless Kitchen? -- 26.Lita Price and Harriet Bonnet, How to Manage without a Maid, 1942 -- 27.Goodbye Mammy, Hello Mom, March 1947 -- 28.You Have 1001 Servants in Your Kitchen, March 1951 / Jean Harris -- 29.Whether You Build, Buy or Modernize, 1953 / Youngstown Kitchens -- 30.The Can-Opener Cookbook, 1952 / Poppy Cannon -- 31.Revolution in the Kitchen, February 15, 1957 -- 32.The I Hate to Cook Book, 1960 / Peg Bracken -- Socialist Kitchens -- 33.The Woman in Soviet Life, March 1959 / Maria Ovsyannikova -- 34.Technology on the March, 1959 / R. Podol'nyi -- |
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Contents note continued: 8.What the Facts Say, July 28, 1959 / V.I. Zhukov -- 9.Home Economist Demonstrates Convenience Foods, July 1959 -- 10.The Miracle Kitchen, March 1959 / Robert Lerner -- 11.Everything for Soviet Man, August 5, 1959 -- Responses to Nixon's Visit -- 12.U.S. Diplomat's Telegram on the American National Exhibition, September 8, 1959 / Edward L. Freers -- 13.Favorable Comments on Exhibition, September 1959 -- 14.Unfavorable Comments on Exhibition, September 1959 -- 15.On Nixon's Visit to the Urals, July 31, 1959 / Ye. Litoshko -- 16.Boy, Did He Tell Them Off!, July 26, 1959 / Bill Mauldin -- 17.Speech in Dnepropetrovsk, July 28, 1959 / Nikita Khrushchev -- 2.Consumers and Consensus -- Capitalist Consumer Citizens -- 18.Why We Eat Better, November 1951 / Alex Henderson -- 19.Speech on Modern Food Distribution, October 20, 1958 / John A. Logan -- 20.The Affluent Society, 1958 / John Kenneth Galbraith -- 21.Split-Level Living, March 9, 1960 / Herblock -- |
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Machine generated contents note: pt. ONE Introduction: The Kitchen Debate in Historical Context -- The Cold War, Containment, and "Peaceful Competition" -- The Politics of Abundance -- The Culture of Containment -- The Politics of Food and Farms -- pt. TWO The Documents -- 1.The Kitchen Debate -- Selling the American Way -- 1.U.S. Ambassador's Telegram on Plans for the American National Exhibition, November 17, 1958 / Llewellyn E. Thompson -- 2.Office of the American National Exhibition in Moscow, Kitchens of Today and Tomorrow Slated for Moscow Exhibition, February 9, 1959 -- 3.Office of the American National Exhibition in Moscow, Cooking Display in Moscow to Feature American Dishes, May 13, 1959 -- 4.Letter to President Dwight Eisenhower, July 10, 1959 / Jerry Marlatt -- Nixon Goes to Moscow -- 5.The Two Worlds: A Day-Long Debate, July 25, 1959 -- 6.A Talk to the Point, July 25, 1959 / Ye. Litoshko -- 7.First Day, First Impressions, July 26, 1959 / V. Osipov -- |
Summary |
Materials ancillary to the "debate" or exchanges between Richard M. Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev at the American National Exhibition in Moscow in 1959 |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Subject |
Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971.
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Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-1994.
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SUBJECT |
American National Exhibition (1959 : Moscow, Russia) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n94075289
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Subject |
Cold War -- Social aspects.
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Consumption (Economics) -- Soviet Union -- History.
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Consumption (Economics) -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
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SUBJECT |
USSR -- Economic conditions -- 1955-1965.
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85125728
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USSR -- Social conditions -- 1945-1991. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85125856
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United States -- Economic conditions -- 1945-
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140024
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USSR -- Foreign relations -- United States.
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85125763
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United States -- Foreign relations -- Soviet Union.
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140115
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United States -- Social conditions -- 1945- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140518
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Author |
Phillips, Sarah T., 1974-
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LC no. |
2014451144 |
ISBN |
0312677103 (paperback) |
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9780312677107 (paperback) |
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